Argues that technology is changing the way we understand human society and discusses how the disciplines of politics, culture, public debate, morality, and humanism will be affected when responsibility for them is delegated to technology
Includes bibliographical references (pages 359-396) and index
Solutionism and its discontents -- The nonsense of "the Internet" and how to stop it -- So open it hurts -- How to break politics by fixing it -- The perils of algorithmic gatekeeping -- Less crime, more punishment -- Galton's iPhone -- The superhuman condition -- Smart gadgets, dumb humans